This file requires Smart Notebook software in order to be used. You can download a free 30 day trial of the software here: Smart Notebook Download. To make your trial version permanent, you will need a serial number of a Smart Board installed in your school.

The presentation referenced some resources for finding lessons for the SmartBoard.
Here are some recommended links:
1. Search Google for Smart Notebook Lessons.
2. Use teacher created Smart Board resources from Smart Exchange: http://exchange.smarttech.com/.
3. Search for Judaic Studies Lessons using the Legacy Heritage SmartBoard Jewish Educational Database: http://legacyheritage.org/SJED/.
4. Keep up on the latest in Smart Board resources by reading the following blogs:

Sunday, December 06, 2009

This past June, I wrote a blog post and posted to the Jewish educational bulletin board Lookjed, about using Twitter in the classroom. For the past year, I have become an avid tweeter for my own personal educational growth, sharing links and experiences with like-minded teachers and technologists. Using this technology with my students To be able to ask a question and get instant responses from everyone in my class (beamed directly to my Smart Board) seemed like an exciting new teaching tools to encourage deep thinking and 100% participation. I already utilized some of these approaches through my online student discussion boards on The Frisch School Wiki. However, the added aspect of "real-time" responses through Twitter added an extra dimension to these discussions which I could not do on my blog. At the same time I knew that as a brand new technology there would be some bumps in implementation and therefore I decided not to start this at the beginning of the school year but to wait a few months until my students got to know me and vice versa.

This past week, I finally started to use Twitter with my 10th grade class in Navi (Biblical Prophets). Here are my initial observations and suggestions.

Be ready to spend a lot of setup time to get the project moving. The project has gone well but not without some significant setbacks. The first period that I introduced it, what I expected to be a 10 minute activity took almost the full 40 minute class period. The second time was much smoother with 2 Twitter discussions as a Do Now at the beginning of class and as an extension activity at the end of class integrated into a period of teaching and student discussion. A teacher choosing to use Twitter must be ready for the initial delays and "wasted" class time in order to get the payoff in future learning activities.

Give students different avenues to use Twitter. My students can Twitter on personal laptops, on school laptops which are on a laptop cart, or on their cell phones.

Setup a private Twitter account special for your class and private Twitter accounts for your students as well. For purposes of safety and security, I do not want my educational work with my students to be a part of my Twitter stream. Therefore, I setup a protected account special for this class. My students mostly do not have Twitter accounts. While I allowed those few with their own accounts to use them, I setup Twitter accounts for the rest with the student's first initial, last name, and the class section. The students follow my class account and all of their fellow students and their account is then blocked so no one else can follow them. It is important that they follow me and I follow them before marking their account as private or else I will not see their Tweets.

Only Twitter at specific times in class and otherwise, do not allow students to use their cell phones or be on Twitter. A constant Twitter stream in a high school class is a distraction and recipe for vandalism. Therefore, I prepare questions that all students must answer (I learned this method from the Nehama Leibowitz) and only then can they Tweet.

Install a Twitter app like Twhirl and keep it open and projected to the front of the class when Tweeting questions and answers. The effect of seeing Tweets pop up on Twitter is electrifying. It models responses for students while encouraging students to respond quickly so they can see their name appear.

Discuss the Tweets in class after they appear on the board. It is important that Twitter is used as a tool to elicit class discussion which is then continued by students through more traditional methods. I still want to hear my students in class and not just see them typing. I use these Tweets to acknowledge students who are too shy to participate in class discussions but write beautiful responses using Twitter. Finally, I will create follow-up activities where I ask students to read their classmate's tweets and categorize them into different approaches to answer a question. Through this students realize that they have been able to anticipate almost all of the approaches of the classical biblical commentaries in their tweets.

I am very satisfied with the results so far and hope to share more about my Twitter experiment as we continue this promising venture.